Entertainment

Online Gambling: What a Long Strange Trip It'll Be

Gambling is coming to a social game near you. This was the unanimous opinion of everyone who attended GIGse, the Global Gaming Expo, in San Francisco last week. The big question is when?

The answer, based on the all the legal and regulatory roadblocks that exist, is not anytime soon. And, in the ad-libbed words of the Grateful Dead, "what a long strange trip it'll be."

Everyone agrees that online gambling will be legalized. The Justice Department's recent decision that the Wire Act of 1961 does not apply to states selling lottery tickets across state lines is a huge deal and opens the door to legalized gambling in the U.S.

Other factors pointing to the legalization of online gambling is that state governments are in debt and need the money from taxing gambling and the fact that millions are playing social casino and poker games on mobile devices and Facebook, but with virtual, not real money. Just last week, it was announced that casino games have overtaken farming as the most popular game genre on Facebook!

So why the delay? Ironically, it’s the government.

The crowd at GIGse (dressed in suits and clean-shaven) looked like they would feel very comfortable at a conservative, Republican, small-government-loving rally. Ironically, they all agreed that what they’d prefer the federal government take the lead in legalizing gambling, so that we’d have uniform rules and regulation across all 50 states. The chances of US Congress pulling this off, however, are about zero.

Instead, every single state is going to pass its own gambling laws. California is currently working to make poker legal, and both Nevada and New Jersey are drafting laws to make online gambling legal in their states. The hope is that there will be some coordination as you see in horse racing and lotteries sometimes. But, most likely, anyone who plans to offer an online gambling site in the U.S. will have to wait for the majority of states to pass legislation and then abide by the rules of 50 separate states.

But wait, there’s more! Gambling will be online and very mobile. That opens a slew of issues:

Taxation: Every state will probably have its own tax rate as well as the federal government. Do you tax the casino based on where the land-based casino is located or where the online bet took place? Do you tax gamblers on their winnings based on their residence or the location where they gambled? How do you handle losses and withholdings?

Location: How do you verify someone’s location in a way that can’t be spoofed? Standard geo-location in apps today will not work. Locaid verifies location via via cell phone tower triangulation, but what if you are in a zone not covered by cell towers or close to the state borders?

Risk Management: How do you prevent fraud and money laundering (which has become a big issue since 9/11 due to terrorism. Macau, which is four times larger than Vegas is driven by money laundering, so it’s a huge issue to deal with.

Legal Jurisdiction: Since online gambling will be mobile, how do you handle legal issues across state lines? For example, what happens if you playing poker on your phone driving in California (where it will be legal) but cross into Arizona (where it may not be). Have you committed a felony?

Age Verification: How do you verify someone’s age online? This is not a problem with social casino games total since it’s using virtual currency and there is an assumption you are 13 years or older. But, once gambling is involved, you have to verify age. And, no one had an answer for how you do that.

As you can see, there are many roadblocks. The consensus at the show was that it would not be until 2014 that online gambling would be legal in the US.

I actually think it could be later than that.

There is one more roadblock which no one talked about and that is the moral and ethical issue.

A lot of people in the gambling and social gaming industries are salivating at the prospect of converting the millions of social gamers playing free virtual casinos into online gamblers. But, is it really a good idea?

Do we really want today’s free social casino games to be a trojan horse for millions of Americans and children to get addicted to online gambling? Right now, social games are all about good clean fun. Throw gambling in the mix, and this changes.

My big takeaway is that online gambling will be legal in the U.S. and that social games will lead the way. But, it’s going to take a longer time to happen than most people in the games industry realize. And, this is probably a good thing. It’ll give us time to decide if this is really the right thing to do.

Mashable
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